Sunday Papers: Malaysia Airlines in brand overhaul

Top stories

The Sunday Telegraph: Malaysia Airlines considers a name change in an attempt to repair its reputation after the downing of flight MH17 and the disappearance of MH370.

The Sunday Telegraph: The Government is expected to launch the "14th onshore licensing round", inviting companies to bid for fracking rights in previously untouched areas.

Mail on Sunday: The John Lewis Partnership is set to report a bumper first half this week that could mean staff clinch record bonuses for the year.

Mail on Sunday: Ingenious, the firm behind a £2 billion film investment scheme which Revenue & Customs views as designed to avoid tax, has told investors it is racking up huge legal bills.

The Sunday Telegraph: Luton Airport owner poised for Europe's biggest float at £7 billion; Aena Aeropuertos appoints five banks to oversee the listing after their pitch attracted senior deal-makers from across Europe.

The Independent on Sunday: Vince Cable has risked clashing with his coalition colleagues over reports that Britain's economy has returned to pre-recession levels.

Business and economics

Mail on Sunday: Pimlico Plumbers, the UK’s largest independent plumbing company, has recorded a £20 million turnover for the first time in its 35-year history; the company saw sales grow by £2 million in the year to 31 May and profits rise from £1.5 million to £1.7 million.

The Sunday Telegraph: Debenhams poaches finance chief from Mothercare; the high street department store lures former Mothercare chief financial officer Matt Smith in a bid to recover from major profit warnings.

Mail on Sunday: Tesco's ousted chief executive Phil Clarke will not receive a bumper payout, the supermarket’s chairman Sir Richard Broadbent declares, insisting that Clarke will get his contractual terms and ‘not a penny more’.

The Sunday Telegraph: Centrica set for showdown with regulator over profit forecasts; British Gas owner to report drop in profits on same day Ofgem publishes data suggesting energy suppliers are enjoying bumper earnings.

The Sunday Telegraph: Former RBS boss 'to make £7 million' from Citizens sale; Bruce Van Saun, former finance directors at the Royal Bank of Scotland, could cash in on the sale of its US operation, Citizens Bank.

The Sunday Telegraph: Retail veterans on shortlist to become new Morrisons chairman; former executives at Asda and Tesco are among the candidates being considered to take over management of the struggling supermarket chain.

The Sunday Telegraph: Orchid pubs chief to step down; Rufus Hall walks away from the Orchid group he founded after a £266 million deal saw it taken over by the owners of All Bar One.

The Sunday Telegraph: Middle East takeaway giant Americana tempts buyers; the company with KFC and Pizza Hut franchise rights is believed to be being sought by major private equity firms, including KKR and Carlyle.

The Sunday Telegraph: Engineering giants Rolls Royce and GKN hit by strong pound; Britain's biggest industrial and engineering firms are likely to be revealed as struggling in the face of a strong pound when they report first-half results this week.

The Sunday Telegraph: A record number of profit warnings have been issued in the first six months of 2014 as companies struggle against the rising pound and growing competition.

Share tips, comment and bids

Mail on Sunday: Stores giant Home Retail Group is considering a plan to spin off its £1.5 billion DIY chain Homebase so it can concentrate on developing its more prosperous Argos chain.

The Sunday Telegraph: Volvox hires PwC to explore sale options; private equity group Elysium Capital brings in PwC to explore a sale of the car parts manufacturer which could fetch £40 million.

Mail on Sunday (Comment): It's too early to celebrate economic recovery; we are at a dangerous juncture. The next few months will be critical for bankers, the Chancellor and households across the UK.

The Observer (Comment): BP and Shell's results this week will be full of detail, but investors only have one question. How is the Ukraine crisis affecting business?

The Observer (Comment): Jeff Bezos wants his customers to live in an Amazon world of books, films, and food. But he needs allies as well as ambition.

The Observer (Editorial): Carlos Slim may have the right idea when it comes to giving people more flexibility in their working lives.

The Sunday Telegraph (Comment): A slump in profits could reignite a flurry of deal-making that will see the oil giants snap up their smaller counterparts around the world.

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